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The Ultimate Basis of the Caching Preferences of Rodents, and the Oak-Dispersal Syndrome: Tannins, Insects, and Seed Germination
Authors:Smallwood  Peter D; Steele  Michael A; Faeth  Stanley H
Institution:1 Department of Biology, University of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia 23173
2 Department of Biology, Wilkes University, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 18766
3 Department of Zoology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287
Abstract:We have shown that eastern gray squirrels and other animalsconsistently prefer to store intact acorns from the red oakgroup rather than those from the white oak group. We hypothesizedthat the ultimate advantage to this behavior comes from thedormancy of red oak acorns. Acorns of the white oak group germinateearly in the autumn; thus, we hypothesize that avoiding germinationis the primary selective advantage to the preference for cachingred oak acorns. Here, we test two alternative hypotheses toexplain the benefits of this caching preference: 1) storingred oak acorns allows the high tannin concentrations in redoak acorns to decline (making them more palatable), and 2) storingred oak acorns minimizes losses to insects, presuming they areless infested with insects. We also test the effect of germinationschedule on squirrel caching preferences directly, by presentingthem with dormant red oak acorns, and red oak acorns about togerminate. We find no evidence that tannin concentrations inred oak acorns decline, although tannin levels did decline inour white oak acorns. We found high losses to insect infestationsin one white oak species, but a second white oak species lostvery little mass to insects. Finally, we found that germinationschedule directly affects squirrel caching preferences: redoak acorns that are near germination are treated like whiteoak acorns. We conclude that the primary advantage to the preferencefor caching red oak acorns is that they are less perishable,due to their dormancy. We discuss the effects of this preferenceon the dispersal of red and white oak acorns, and the subsequenteffects of differential dispersal on the ecology and evolutionof oaks.
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